They are a 6 to 7 inch fish so you could just get away with keeping one in a 'Nominal' 8 gallon tank. (when in use it will only be holding around 7 gallons) These fish should be kept at around 78F. If you want to keep fish succesfully. The basic rules are . :- 1 inch of fish must have at least 1 gallon of water. :- Every tank must have a permanently running 'cycled' filter. :- Every tank must have at least 50% of its water replaced every week.
No shark can live in a 3 gallon tank. It would be a nice home for a Betta though!
depends, can a ten gallon tank live in a goldfish
It would be a crowded tank. Depending on type of shark (bala, red tail, rainbow, etc.) would depict the amount of time it would work. However no type would be very long lasted.
I'm sorry but no turtle can live in a 2.5 gallon tank. You will need a least a 20 gallon tank and that is even iffy when they grow up I would say get a 30-40 gallon tank for one turtle.
I have a 55 gallon tank with a large pleco, some mollies, a rainbow shark, a red fin shark, an albino clawed frog, a beta fish, and two dojo loaches. Can I put an eel in there? Like a zig zag?
no.you have to have at least an 90 gallon tank or an 100 gallon tank.
I would suggest upgrading to a 10 gallon tank.
Sharks need a good water flow (current) and almost perfect water. If you can provide a perfect habitat and have all the necessary equipment including suitable filtration a 30 gallon tank would not be big enough to house any but the tinyest of sharks (no bigger than 20 inches) and then only for a short time because the shark would outgrow the tank very quickly.
yes they can but they have to be in a ten gallon tank or 17 gallon you can fit one inch of a fish per gallon
The recommended number of shrimp that can comfortably live in a 20-gallon tank is around 20 to 30 shrimp.
I think that would probably be fine. Although africans are quite aggressive, they tend to ignore bottom dwelling fish like rainbow sharks. I've seen it done before. If you are looking for a bottom feeder for an African tank that is guaranteed to work, get yourself a synodontis catfish. They are from the same lakes, get along with cichlids, and can be stunningly beautiful.
A 20-gallon tank can comfortably house around 5 to 7 mollies.